Fosse Way A46, Many sections of the Fosse Way form parts of modern roads and lanes, and parish, district or county boundaries. When troops of Emperor Claudius landed in Kent in AD 43, they soon pushed inland and conquered much of southern England. Large portions of the old road have been lost, bypassed, or replaced by motorway development. Fosse Way from the top of [Brinklow Castle, Warwickshire South of Leicester, apart from a short deviation near Narborough where the original course is no longer visible, the B4114 (originally the A46 but renumbered when the M69 was opened) follows the route. . Between Leicester and Lincoln the A46, follows the route of the Fosse Way. After bypassing Lincoln, it starts following the route of the old Fosse Way (bar bypasses). Fosse Way from the top of Brinklow Castle, Warwickshire South of Leicester, the B4114 (originally the A46 but renumbered when the M69 was opened) follows the route, apart from a short deviation near Narborough, where the original course is no longer visible. The road becomes the boundary of Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire for 1 mile (1. In places it is a major road, in others a country path. nf, 0kxm9, lr, dqlcfp, oxi, jyhid, cxyatby, yewr, ph3b, zce,